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BF sawn per day for portable sawyers

Started by Dan_Shade, March 23, 2008, 08:35:21 AM

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Dan_Shade

As a portable sawyer, you have good days where production is great, the help is great, the layout is great, and you can make good time.  There are also the other days, where everythign is bad (but we don't talk about that)!

Yesterday I sawed 2350 international scaled bf of pine into 2x6s for a customer, and we were all whipped!  That's the most I've sawn in a day, I averaged around 270bf/hour with my LT40HDG25G (that's a hydraulic model with a 25hp gas engine for the non-woodmizer guys), which is pretty good, I believe.

I'm wondering what other mills can do out there in the real world.  Granted this is a max number, I think Tom's 1300bf/day target is a pretty good one, people are wearing out by then when working by hand.

Woodmizer LT40HDG25 / Stihl 066 alaskan
lots of dull bands and chains

There's a fine line between turning firewood into beautiful things and beautiful things into firewood.

zopi

you bored, Dan?  <G>


I haven't worried about it...since I am sawing for myself, and usually alone, I cut 'til i get tired of it and
go do something else...touch of ADD maybe....
Got Wood?
LT-15G GO chassis added.
WM sharpener and setter
And lots of junk.

bseago

Had some nicepine logs the other day sawed 9,400 bf of 1 inch in 14 hours .
We have a lt40 42hp and an edger.

Fla._Deadheader


I'm gonna be sawing 8 X 8's X 20' next 2 days. BD/Ft per hour OUGHT to be good. Depends on how well the loader is available.  ::) ::)
All truth passes through three stages:
   First, it is ridiculed;
   Second, it is violently opposed; and
   Third, it is accepted as self-evident.

-- Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

Dan_Shade

this is definately an "it depends" type of thing.  I see crazy numbers in the manufacturers literature, and then for real crazy numbers at SAWLEX.  I want to get down to see that sometime, get some pointers on speed.

I did get slowed down yesterday, when I got interupted and then tried to saw a bolt on my backstop off.  I only made it halfway through.
Woodmizer LT40HDG25 / Stihl 066 alaskan
lots of dull bands and chains

There's a fine line between turning firewood into beautiful things and beautiful things into firewood.

John Bartley

Yup ... this is an "it depends" for sure...

I have a manual mill, so I do a lot of handling, but if I were to actually saw for 6 hours out of an 8 hour work day (to compare a cutting work day to a work day for a "normally employed" person), I could cut about 1200 to 1500bdft. This is assuming a band change every 200-300bdft and no real handling problems.

NOTE :: I am a very new sawyer, so I'm still waayyy down on the learning curve, but this is my limited experience so far.

MILL : 25hp Kohler - 162" bands - 0,042" x 7/8" Timberwolf

cheers eh?
Kioti DK35HSE w/loader & forks
Champion 25hp band mill, 20' bed
Stihl MS361
Stihl 026

Dan_Shade

I did a little tabulating from last years records:

I averaged 1050 BF/sawing job last year, I'm trying to keep track of the hours on the job this year so that I can get a better idea of what's really going on, since I had several 2-5 log jobs last year for woodworkers.

I'm coming to the conclusion that regardless of how much I want a faster mill, this one does a dandy job of working the help into the ground!
Woodmizer LT40HDG25 / Stihl 066 alaskan
lots of dull bands and chains

There's a fine line between turning firewood into beautiful things and beautiful things into firewood.

StorminN

Happiness... is a sharp saw.

Cedarman

When sawing, the most important thing is not the number of feet per day.  Although it can be a yardstick to compare amount of wood moving across the mill.  The most important thing is the number of dollars left over at the end of the day after expenses. Or at the end of the week, month or year.  If you saw every day, then a daily record  can be used.  If you saw only a few days per month, then a monthy record.

By using dollars rather than wood as the measuring stick, it becomes more apparent how good business is.

I may only saw 1000 feet per day, my margin may be 60 cents per foot.  My planer may add another 17 cents per foot, my dryer may add another 25 cents per foot, my moulder may add another 50 cents per foot and so on.  These are some of the things I can do to add value beyond just making lumber.

If we take just sawing.

If I saw 1000 feet per day sawing cedar and my margin is 60 cents per foot, and expenses are 35 cents per foot when you figure overhead, labor, blade costs, loader costs, depreciation, energy, etc.  I have netted $250 profit for the day.

Now if I saw 2000 feet per day custom sawing poplar and my margin is 30 cents per foot and my expenses are 19 cents per foot, 16 cents less because of less labor costs per board foot, less depreciation per board foot, but more energy costs, blade costs etc. I have netted $220 profit.

Different species, different markets,  same location, can make a big difference.

Don't get me wrong, producing the maximum amount of footage per day should be the goal.  But the comparison should be to your own daily production, not to the production of another operation unless they are doing exactly what you are doing.
I am in the pink when sawing cedar.

pasbuild

I had a tour of a mill last week that cuts 150,000 bf per 8 hour shift but thats probably not what yer lookin fer ;D
If it can't be nailed or glued then screw it

Ron Wenrich

Cedarman

I believe they're talking about portable custom sawing.  Since pay is based on volume, then volume is very important. 

Yours is a valid point when it comes to running your own mill or sawing your own logs.  But, as volume goes down, your sawing costs generally go up.  That can decrease your margin.  As said, all depends on your product.
Never under estimate the power of stupid people in large groups.

Cedarman

Ron I take your points.
When your volume goes down, your margin goes down so price must go up to maintain the profit.  Each mill and operation has their own optimal volume per day for what they are sawing.  It is important to keep records of what is sawn and volume obtained to be able to compare day to day or whatever time scale is appropriate.  One point I am making that the most important comparison is first to your own output and second to others output.
From this analysis a price list can be figured based on what is being sawn and the product to be sawn.  I think this is why some people price by the hour rather than by the foot.

I have always liked sawing by the foot to give me that incentive to get with it.  Also, I never felt guilty about smelling the roses.
I am in the pink when sawing cedar.

Dan_Shade

you have some good points, Cedarman.  I agree on the BF count.  I've gotten away from "actual" sawn to scaled volume, just to make life easier.  counting up 6 different stacks of 10 different lenth and width boards is a pain at the end of the day....

I guess i'm curious to how those of us portable guys line up with each other, but this stuff really is like bench racing instead of doing it for real!

sometimes, crunching all the numbers makes things look bleak as a business perspective, but other times, they look great!
Woodmizer LT40HDG25 / Stihl 066 alaskan
lots of dull bands and chains

There's a fine line between turning firewood into beautiful things and beautiful things into firewood.

Tom Sawyer

4550 bft in 9.5 hours a couple of weeks ago.  That was 18' 2x12s, 2x6s, and 2x4s, and a bit of 1x4, (hickory, maple, ash, and white oak) plus I had 2 guys pulling stuff off the mill.  If I am cutting 12' 4/4 hardwood for grade by myself stickering as I go, I usually drop at about 1500bft. ;D

Tom

cantcutter

I have been averaging 780 BF a day (6 hours), alone. That  is me loading the mill, runnig it, turning the logs, off loading, stacked and stickering.
That is with a Timberking 1600.

Dan_Shade

What kind of setup are you running, Tom?
Woodmizer LT40HDG25 / Stihl 066 alaskan
lots of dull bands and chains

There's a fine line between turning firewood into beautiful things and beautiful things into firewood.

Tom Sawyer

Dan, if you meant me, and not some other Tom, I have a WMLT40HD Super, with the 51hp Cat Diesel.  The 9.5 hours were spread over 2 days, and I think the two guys pulling those 18' 2x12s were pretty tired!  I prefer logs less than 12' when I am cutting myself ;D

Tom

Part_Timer

With no hydrolics I perfer those logs in the 20"-24" range.  They are just right to roll on the bunks by myself

If I'm lucky the customer has 48" log 12' long and we don't have to roll logs at all.


Best I've ever done was cutting 2x6's out of a 48"x 6.5' oak in 45 minutes and that included mill tear down and a 5 minute drive home.  I had 2 good tail men that day.
Peterson 8" ATS.
The only place success comes before work is in the dictionary.

snowman

Some of you guys are making me feel stupid :D. I think I average about 800 feet a day with my little pushmill with a 13hp honda.I do however sharpen blades as part of my work day,clean air filter, fuel stuff up, check oil, grease etc. I also wash my logs as I need them, then theres the lumber to stack, slabs to move. It sometimes seems milling wood is the least of my day after I add all the other stuff in.

beav39

i can average around 1200 to 2000 in an 8 to 10 hr day depends on the wood and how the day is going .ive done 3200bdft with a helper once,the wood was big pine i cut all 1by12",14"16"18"and 20 inch wide boards
sawdust in the blood

oldsaw

How about 0-500 with a CSM?  Not in it for the money, in it for the wood.  That's a workout.

Mark
So many trees, so little money, even less time.

Stihl 066, Husky 262, Husky 350 (warmed over), Homelite Super XL, Homelite 150A

Dan_Shade

500 bf with a chainsaw mill is impressive!
Woodmizer LT40HDG25 / Stihl 066 alaskan
lots of dull bands and chains

There's a fine line between turning firewood into beautiful things and beautiful things into firewood.

Warren

LT40 Super 42 HP Diesel, working by myself:  Best ever single day was a little over 1,500 bf of 4x4 blocking.  Typically average 800-1,000 bf in hardwoods, 500-700 bf in cedar.

Average a little over 5 hours actual run time on the saw per day.  Another 3 to 5 hours of moving logs, loading logs, bundling slabs, moving slabs, bundling lumber. moving lumber, talking to customers, visiting customer sites, prospecting for new business, unloading customer logs, loading customer lumber, selling bundles of slabs for firewood, unloading and scaling gate wood....

As Cedarman said, the true proof of the pudding (for a business) is how much jingle is left in your pocket at the end of the day...

Warren

LT40SHD42, Case 1845C,  Baker Edger ...  And still not near enough time in the day ...

oldsaw

Quote from: Dan_Shade on March 26, 2008, 05:52:37 AM
500 bf with a chainsaw mill is impressive!

It's called one long day split into two.  Two mornings, but deadstacked the lumber from the first day, so all had to be stacked and stickered after the second.

Mark
So many trees, so little money, even less time.

Stihl 066, Husky 262, Husky 350 (warmed over), Homelite Super XL, Homelite 150A

ErikC

  I voted 2000-2500 with a swingmill. A few times we have done more, once sawing a lot of timbers 5000, but that isn't regular.

Erik
Peterson 8" with 33' tracks, JCB 1550 4x4 loader backhoe, several stihl chainsaws

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